That's right. The attachments are ordered Left to Right (1,2,3). In the mean time, I also received the same answer on another community site. So all I needed to do was click on the magnifying glass just to the left of the "Filter Keyword" entry field and select "Show all Keywords Inside Matches." Now, it does just what it used to do. It displays all the subordinate keywords of the filter word(s). For those who might be interested, here is how I have been using keyword hierarchies to organize photos of extended families. I have 25,000 some odd photos using a lot of nested keywords. They span from the 1800s to current and to places all around the world. To help manage them, I created hierarchy categories: People, Places (including street addresses), Event Dates, Develop/print Dates, and a special category for managing relationships with more precision than simply nesting by names. My event dates are formatted as: "ev-yyyy-mm-dd", or "ev-yyyy", or any combination in between to allow proper sorting. The events are also sub-categorized by decades, ie: "ev-1950s" to allow more general result sets. Develop/print dates are formatted similarly: "de-yyyy-mm". Most develop/print dates show only year and month. Include days when needed. I also have a special set of keywords to help manage dates: ev?, ev-Est, ev-bef, ev-aft, ev-Rng (the two dates represent a range); names: nm?, places: loc?, loc-Est, loc-Near, etc.. That makes it easy to classify images for precision, or with unknown elements for possible eventual resolution. I discovered early on that these phrases cannot have spaces in them. The one shortcoming of this nesting is that any keyword may only belong to one "parent," ie., one hierarchical branch. I have created a work-a-round for that using initials of a person who belongs to another primary branch. My primary branch is on my mother's side. To link me to my father's side, I nest my initials "WCS" under my name along with the nams of my spouse and children, and use my initials in the other branch. My spouse uses her name in her primary branch and her initials in her secondary branch. Hopefully this will be helpful for some out there.
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